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| Fossilized dinosaur droppings found in
central India show sauropod dinosaurs may have fed on grass between 65
million and 71 million years ago. (File photo) |
WASHINGTON, Nov. 17 (Xinhuanet) -- Fossilized dinosaur droppings found in
central India show sauropod dinosaurs may have fed on grass between 65 million
and 71 million years ago, refuting the theory that grasses emerged long after
the dinosaur era, an international team of researchers reported in the journal
Science to be published on Friday.
The discovery surprised scientists. The earliest grass fossils ever found could
be traced back to about 55 million years ago. And the giant plant-eating
sauropod dinosaurs were supposed to eat plants like ferns and palms, as they
didn't have the special kind of teeth needed to grind up abrasive blades.
The team of Vandana Prasad of the Birbal Sahni Institute of Palaeobotany in
Lucknow, India, studied the dinosaur coprolites, or fossilized droppings, of 65
million years ago.
They sent some photographs and samples to Caroline Stromberg ofthe Swedish
Museum of Natural History, who spotted tiny particles of silica called
phytoliths that have come from the grass family, including relatives of rice and
bamboo and forage-type grasses.
Scientists said the diversity of the grasses suggest that grasses must have
originated considerably earlier, well over 80 million years ago. The findings
also suggest that rodent-like early mammals that roamed among the dinosaurs may
have fed on grass. They had teeth looking like those of grass-eating animals
today, but much smaller. Enditem |